Music Education Results in New Knowledge of Brain Workings

A new research study suggests the ability to predict future melodies in a piece of music — after the music has been disconnected — demonstrates a unique way in which the brain operates.

Scientists now predict that these expectations should be different for people with different musical experience. An article in the journal NeuroImage explains the brain mechanisms involved.

UK researchers Marcus Pearce, Geraint Wiggins, Joydeep Bhattacharya and their colleagues have shown that expectations are likely to be based on learning through experience with music.

Music has a grammar, which, like language, consists of rules that specify which notes can follow which other notes in a piece of music.

According to Pearce: “the question is whether the rules are hard-wired into the auditory system or learned through experience of listening to music and recording, unconsciously, which notes tend to follow others.”

The researchers asked 40 people to listen to hymn melodies (without lyrics) and state how expected or unexpected they found particular notes. They simulated a human mind listening to music with two computational models.

The first model uses hard-wired rules to predict the next note in a melody. The second model learns through experience of real music which notes tend to follow others, statistically speaking, and uses this knowledge to predict the next note.

The results showed that the statistical model predicts the listeners’ expectations better than the rule-based model. It also turned out that expectations were higher for musicians than for non-musicians and for familiar melodies – which also suggests that experience has a strong effect on musical predictions.

In a second experiment, the researchers examined the brain waves of a further 20 people while they listened to the same hymn melodies. Although in this experiment the participants were not explicitly informed about the locations of the expected and unexpected notes, their brain waves in responses to these notes differed markedly.

Typically, the timing and location of the brain wave patterns in response to unexpected notes suggested that they stimulate responses that synchronize different brain areas associated with processing emotion and movement.

These findings may help scientists to understand why we listen to music. “It is thought that composers deliberately confirm and violate listeners’ expectations in order to communicate emotion and aesthetic meaning,” said Pearce.

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Rick Nauert PhD

Dr. Rick Nauert has over 25 years experience in clinical, administrative and academic healthcare. He is currently an associate professor for Rocky Mountain University of Health Professionals doctoral program in health promotion and wellness. Dr. Nauert began his career as a clinical physical therapist and served as a regional manager for a publicly traded multidisciplinary rehabilitation agency for 12 years. He has masters degrees in health-fitness management and healthcare administration and a doctoral degree from The University of Texas at Austin focused on health care informatics, health administration, health education and health policy. His research efforts included the area of telehealth with a specialty in disease management.